Pelusi v. Mandes

167 A. 456, 109 Pa. Super. 439, 1933 Pa. Super. LEXIS 320
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 24, 1933
DocketAppeal 151
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 167 A. 456 (Pelusi v. Mandes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pelusi v. Mandes, 167 A. 456, 109 Pa. Super. 439, 1933 Pa. Super. LEXIS 320 (Pa. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

This appeal is by Joseph Mandes and Sons, contracting masons, and their insurance carrier, from a judgment entered by the court below upon an award of compensation to the dependent widow and daughter of an employe, Louis Pelusi, for his sudden death on November 14, 1929.

Admittedly, Pelusi’s death occurred while he was in the course of his employment, but the pivotal question, under the assignments, is whether it was caused by “an accident,” within the meaning of Section 301 of Article III of our Workmen’s Compensation Law of June 2, 1915, P. L. 736, or was the natural result of a progressive and incurable disease with which he was afflicted.

These material and uncontroverted facts were developed by the testimony:

Claimant’s husband, about forty-five years of age, was employed’ by appellants as a laborer and had been *441 doing the work in which he was engaged when stricken (delivering wet cement from a wheelbarrow to masons) “off and on” for a period of about four years.

In the language of Dr. Blakeslee, called by claimant, Pelusi was “handicapped” by a “chronic, degenerative disease of the circulatory system and of the kidneys, with a specialized diseased process involving the arch of the aorta ...... a lesion known as an aneurysm.” This witness also said the presence of the aneurysm placed the employe’s life “in jeopardy, whether he was moving or whether he was quiet, and any effort, even though it may be slight, would be sufficient to rupture this aneurysm” with fatal results.

Another medical expert likened the condition of Pelusi’s aorta to that of “a. rubber tube about to give way.”

The coroner’s physician, who performed the post mortem, said: “He shouldn’t have been on the job; if he would have been in bed, he would have been better off; sick man”; and explained that his continual'exertion from day to day had gradually enlarged the artery.

At the time of Pelusi’s death appellants were constructing the Clothier Memorial at Swarthmore College. He had been engaged for several days in delivering wet cement to the masons. It was mixed on the ground, run into a wheelbarrow, having a wooden frame and iron pan, and the loaded barrow, weighing from 150 to 200 pounds, was placed upon an elevator and hoisted to a scaffold about twelve feet above the ground. When the cement arrived at the scaffold, it became the duty of Pelusi to remove the barrow from the elevator and wheel it along the level scaffold, six feet in width and constructed of heavy planks, delivering the cement to the masons as needed by them.

On the morning of November 14, 1929, Pelusi reported for work at seven o’clock and worked at his *442 usual task for more than an hour. Shortly after eight, he wheeled his barrow a distance of about seven feet from the elevator and stopped at the station of a mason, a fellow countryman who was about to return to Italy. He put his barrow down and engaged momentarily in conversation with this workman; suddenly the color of his face changed and he died almost instantly from a rupture of the aneurysm.

With reference to the wheelbarrow and the nature of the work, one of his employers testified: “It is a two-legged affair with one wheel; regular wheelbarrow; where the wheel is an axle; after you have it up, just lean against it; it is easy; level stretch; but, if you are going to push it up a hill, I will say it is some job.”

The award was based upon this finding of fact by the board: “There is medical testimony that Pelusi’s death was due to a rupture of an aneurysm of the ascending arch of the aorta, that he had for some time been afflicted with this aneurysm, and that the strain and exertion of wheeling the wheelbarrow load of cement caused the rupture; and we so find as a fact.” From this, the conclusion of law was drawn that his death resulted from “an accidental injury suffered in the course of his employment.”

In our opinion, the law has not been properly applied to the facts appearing from the evidence in this case.

The fatal defect in claimant’s case is that although she has shown her husband’s death resulted from violence to the physical structure of his body, she has not adduced any evidence that the violence was occasioned through the happening of any undesigned, unforeseen, sudden or unexpected, occurrence — any mishap, untoward or fortuitous, event.

There is no evidence of any objective happening or incident (Micale v. Light & S. W. Ins. Fund, 105 Pa. *443 Superior Ct. 399, 161 A. 600) outside of the usual and normal course of events to be expected in the performance of the work in which Pelusi had been engaged daily; nor is there any evidence from which the inference could be drawn that there was anything unusual about the exertion put forth by him in moving this particular load of cement.

It is clear from an examination of the testimony of the medical experts that when they spoke of “extra” or “undue” strain they meant any strain in excess of the normal blood pressure. One of them said: “He probably was straining that condition with every bodily movement he made. It has a whole ehain of effects on that diseased vessel wall that brought about the end. The aneurysm wall wasn’t able, and in many cases isn’t able, to withstand any variations in pressure in the circulation and with an aneurysm the efforts, the physical efforts put forth by the individual, have a rather great effect upon the aneurysm and sooner or later lead to rupture.”

In every compensation ease, the claimant must first show the happening of some “accident”; only after that has been done, are the compensation authorities empowered to consider its alleged harmful results.

We now have an authoritative interpretation by our Supreme Court of the words, “an accident,” as they are used in the statute. In Lacey v. Washburn and Williams Company, 309 Pa. 574, Mr. Justice Drew, speaking for the court, said: “The rule deducible from our decisions limits the right to recover compensation to cases where injury or death is due to some unexpected or fortuitous event.”

We think this case is ruled by Gausman v. Pearson Co., 284 Pa. 348, 131 A. 247; Diriscavage v. Penna. Coal Co, 96 Pa. Superior Ct. 189; O’Neill v. Lehigh C. & Nav. Co, 108 Pa. Superior Ct. 425; Waleski v. Susquehanna Collieries Co, 108 Pa. Superior Ct. 342; and Mooney v. Yeagle et al., 107 Pa. Superior Ct. 409.

*444 In the O’Neill case the death of the employe was caused by an attack of angina pectoris which occurred while he was engaged in the performance of his usual duties as a carpenter for a coal company, and in the Mooney case the decedent, a plumber, was stricken with a fatal heart attack while working in a trench. There, as here, it appeared from the evidence that Mooney had been suffering for more than a year from chronic myocarditis and it was contended that his death had been superinduced by the strain of his work, which was excessive for a man in his physical condition. In discussing the necessity of proving some accident, Keller, J., reviewed the leading cases on both sides of the line and that discussion need not be repeated.

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167 A. 456, 109 Pa. Super. 439, 1933 Pa. Super. LEXIS 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pelusi-v-mandes-pasuperct-1933.